Pure water is considered to be neutral
No, H2O (water) is not considered a strong acid. It is a neutral substance.
Generally a neutral substance is called an inert substance.
No, O2 is not a strong electrolyte. It is a neutral molecule and does not dissociate into ions in water, which is required for a substance to be a strong electrolyte.
No, H2O (water) is not considered a strong base. It is actually a neutral substance. Strong bases typically have a high pH level and can easily dissociate in water to release hydroxide ions.
When a strong acid and a strong base is combined, it neutralizes each other. During neutralization, a new "neutral" substance and water is produced. The "neutral" substance will be either acidic or basic in a very weak manner. Since one is always stronger than the other by a small factor, the substance will always get either H3O+ or OH- in a small quantity in the "neutral" substance. This quantity is so small, it does not affect the pH and it usually ends up at 7 after successful neutralization.
No, H2O (water) is not considered a strong acid. It is a neutral substance.
The product of the reaction between a strong acid and a strong base is a salt neutral in water solution.
Generally a neutral substance is called an inert substance.
No, O2 is not a strong electrolyte. It is a neutral molecule and does not dissociate into ions in water, which is required for a substance to be a strong electrolyte.
Right in the middle, at pH = 7, are neutral , pure water is neutral
No, H2O (water) is not considered a strong base. It is actually a neutral substance. Strong bases typically have a high pH level and can easily dissociate in water to release hydroxide ions.
When a strong acid and a strong base is combined, it neutralizes each other. During neutralization, a new "neutral" substance and water is produced. The "neutral" substance will be either acidic or basic in a very weak manner. Since one is always stronger than the other by a small factor, the substance will always get either H3O+ or OH- in a small quantity in the "neutral" substance. This quantity is so small, it does not affect the pH and it usually ends up at 7 after successful neutralization.
Water is an electrically neutral substance.
Hydrochloric acid is actually an acid, not a base or neutral substance. It is a strong acid that dissociates in water to form hydronium ions and chloride ions.
The water is a neutral substance but the molecule is polar.
water is neither an acid or a base. It is neutral or a 7 on the pH scale. remember pure water is neutral.if there is impurity like tap water pH may vary from 7 on either side.
distilled water